The at Long Lake Part 2 (1/2)

”You've served more time than is needed for promotion, Dolly. It's all up to you, as the boys say. As soon as you win the honors you need you can be a Fire Maker. You can have your new rank just as soon as you earn it.”

”Bessie and I are going to be made Fire Makers together, if we can, Miss Eleanor. We talked that over the other day, at the farm, and I think well be ready at the first camp fire we have after we get home.”

”Well, you'll please me very much if you do. It's time the other girls were getting up now--we've got to cook breakfast now. I'll call them while you two build a fire--there's plenty of wood for to-day, piled up over there.”

AS Dolly had said, with each girl doing her share, the work of the camp was light. While some of the girls did the cooking, others prepared the ”dining table”--a smooth place on the ground--and others pinned up the bottom flaps of; the tents, after turning out the bedding, so that the floors of the tents might be well aired. And then they all sat down, happily and hungrily, to a breakfast that tasted just as good as had supper the night before.

”Can we swim in the lake, Miss Eleanor?” asked Margery Burton.

”If you want to,” said Eleanor, with a smile. ”It's pretty cold water, though; a good deal colder than it was at the sea sh.o.r.e last year. You see, this lake is fed by springs, and in the spring the ice melts, and the water in April and May is just like ice water. But you'll get used to it, if you only stay in a couple of minutes at first, and get accustomed to the chill gradually. But remember the rule: no one is ever to go unless I'm right at hand, and there must always be someone in a boat, ready to help if a girl gets a cramp or any other sort of trouble.”

”Oh, are there boats?” cried Dolly. ”That's fine! Where are they, Miss Eleanor?”

”You shall see them after we've cleared away the breakfast things and washed up. But there's a rule about the boats, too: no one is to go out in them except in bathing suits. And remember this, when you're out on the lake. It's very narrow, and it looks very calm and safe, now.

”But at this time of the year there are often severe squalls up here, and they come over the hills so quickly that it's easy to get caught unless you're very careful. I think there had better always be two girls in each boat. We don't want any accidents.”

”Can we go for walks through the woods, Miss Eleanor?”

”Oh, yes; that's the most beautiful part of being up here. But it's easy to get lost. When you start on a trail always stick to it. Don't be tempted to go off exploring. I'm going to give you all some lessons in finding your way in the woods. You know, the moss is always on the south side of a tree, and there are other ways of telling direction, by the leaves. I expect you all to be regular woodsmen when we go away from here, and I'm sure you'll learn things about the woods that will give you a good many pleasant times in the future”

”Isn't there anyone else at all up here, Miss Eleanor? I should think there'd be a hotel or something like that here.”

”No, not yet; not right near here. This lake is part of a big preserve that is owned by a lot of men in the city. My father is one of them, and they have tried to keep all this part of the woods just as nature left it. There are a lot of deer here, and in the fall, when hunters come into the woods, they have to keep out of this part of them. A few deer are shot here, because if only a few are taken each year, it's all right. But there will be no hotels in this tract. Hotels mean the end of the real woods life. There are half a dozen lakes in the preserve, and each of the families that owns a share in it has a camp at one of the lakes. I mean a regular camp, with wooden buildings, where one can stay in the winter, even. But this lake was set apart for trips like this, where people can get right back to nature, and sleep in tents.”

”Then we can go over and see some of the other lakes?”

”Yes; I don't know whether we'll find anyone at home in any of the camps or not, but they'll be glad to see us if they are there. A lot of people wait until later in the year to come up here--until the hunting season begins. But we can do some hunting even now, though it's against the law to do any shooting.”

”Oh, I know what you mean, Miss Eleanor--with a camera?”

It was Margery Burton who thought of that.

”Yes. And that's really the best sort of hunting, I think. If you've ever seen a deer, and had it look at you with its big, soft eyes, I don't see how you can kill it. It's almost as hard to get a good picture of e deer as it is to kill it--in fact, I think it's harder, because you have to get so much closer to it And it's awfully good fun at night.

”You go to one of their runways, and settle down with your camera and a flashlight powder, and then when the deer comes, if you're very quick, you can get a really beautiful picture. The deer may be a little frightened, but he isn't hurt, and you have a picture that you can keep for years and show to people. And an experienced hunter will tell you that any time you can get close enough to a deer to get a good flashlight picture of him you could easily have killed him.”

”Why is it so very hard to do that?”

”Well, for lots of reasons. You have to figure on the wind--because if the wind is blowing away from you and toward the deer he can smell you long before he's in sight, and off he goes, afraid to come any nearer.”

”But how can you tell where a deer will be?”

”They have regular runways--just as we have trails. And at night they come down to the lake to drink. So you can station yourself on one of those runways, and be pretty sure that sooner or later a deer will come along.”

The morning pa.s.sed quickly and happily. To the girls who had never before been in that country, there seemed to be an unending number of new discoveries. Timid as the deer might be, there was nothing nervous about the squirrels and chipmunks which abounded in the woods near the lake, and as soon as they saw the girls they came running about, so that there were often half a dozen or more begging noisily for dainties to afford them a change from their diet of nuts, sitting up, and chattering prettily as they got the morsels that were tossed to them.

”I never saw them so tame, even at home,” said Bessie, surprised. ”We had plenty of them there, but I suppose they were wilder because the boys used to shoot them. They don't do that here, I suppose?”

”No; the people who hunt around here go in for bigger game. They would think they were wasting their time if they bothered to shoot chipmunks and squirrels.”

”I've seen them tame before, but that was in the park, at home, and it isn't the same thing at all,” said Dolly.

”No; though they're very cute, and I'm glad there are so many of them there. But here, of course, they're in their real home, and it's different, and much nicer, I think.”

Then, after luncheon, Miss Eleanor divided the girls into watches.

”I think we'll have more fun if a certain number stay home every afternoon to prepare dinner and cook it,” she said. ”Then the rest of you can go for walks, or do anything you like, so long as you are back in time for dinner. In that way, some of you will be free every afternoon, and those who have to work won't mind, because they will know that the next day they will be free, and so on.”

Zara was one of those who drew a piece of paper marked ”work” from the big hat in which Miss Eleanor put a slip of paper for every girl, while Bessie and Dolly each drew a slip marked ”play.”

”To-morrow the girls who work to-day will play,” said Miss Eleanor, ”and those who play to-day will draw again. Four of them will play again to-morrow, and the other four will work, and then, on the third day, those who play tomorrow will work, and on the fourth day to-day's four will work again. That will give everyone two days off and one day to work while we're in camp. And I think that's fair.”

So did everyone else, and Dolly, always willing to put off work as long as she could, was delighted.

”Let's take a long walk this afternoon, Bessie,” she said. ”The air up here makes me feel more like walking than I ever do when I'm at home. There I usually take a car whenever I can, though I've been trying to walk more lately, so as to get an honor bead.”

”I'll be glad to take a walk, Dolly,” said Bessie, laughing. ”I think you ought to be encouraged any time you really want to do something that's good for you.”

”Oh, if I stay with you long enough I'll be too good to keep on living,” said Dolly. ”Don't you see the difference between us, Bessie? You're good because you like to do the things you ought to do. And when anyone tells me something's good for me, I always get so that I don't want to do it. We'll start right after lunch, shall we?”

”All right,” said Bessie.

But before it was time to make a start she sought out Miss Eleanor.

”I'm not really afraid, Wanaka,” she said, using the Indian name, since, here in the woods, it seemed natural to do it. ”But I thought I ought to ask you if you think it's all right for me to go off with Dolly? I suppose none of those people who were trying to get hold of me would do anything up here, would they?”

”Oh, I don't think so, Bessie. No, I think you're just as safe anywhere in these woods as you would be right here in the camp. There are a few guides around--they have to be kept here to warn people who make camp and don't put out their fires properly. You see, my father and the rest of the people don't mind letting nice people come here into their preserve to camp, but they've got to be careful about fire.

”You can imagine what would happen here if the woods caught fire; it would be dreadful. Further on, the woods are only just beginning to grow up again. They were all burned out a year or so ago, and they look horrid. This preserve is so beautiful that we all want to keep it looking just as nice as possible. But the guides would look after you; there's nothing to be afraid of with them.

”And I don't believe that you'd be at all likely to meet anyone else. Suppose you take the trail that starts at the far end of the lake, and follow it straight over until you come to Little Bear Lake. That's a very pretty walk. But don't go off the preserve. There's a trail that leads over to Loon Pond, but you'd better not try that until we all go as a party.”

So, when the midday meal had been eaten, Bessie and Dolly started off, skirting the edge of the lake until they came to the beginning of the trail Miss Mercer had spoken of, which was marked by a birch bark sign on a tree. There they left the lake, and plunged so quickly into thick woods that the water was soon out of sight.

”Isn't this lovely? Oh, I could walk miles and miles here and never get tired at all, I believe!” said Dolly. ”But I do sort of wish there was a hotel somewhere around. They have dances, and parties, and all sorts of fun at those hotels. And, Bessie, do you know I heard there was one near here, at a place called Loon Pond?”

”Is there?”

”Yes; I think it would be fun to go there some time.”

”Well, maybe we can, some time, Dolly. When Miss Eleanor is along. But we'd better not do it today. You know she said we were to stick to the preserve.”

”Oh, bother; as if we could get into any mischief up here! But I suppose there wouldn't be any use in trying to persuade you; you always do just as you're told.”

”Oh, I'd like to see the hotel, too, Dolly, but not today. The woods are enough for me now. And we can go there some other time, I'm sure.”